United States v. Ricketts

23 C.M.A. 487, 1 M.J. 78, 50 C.M.R. 567, 23 USCMA 487, 1975 CMA LEXIS 739
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedJuly 18, 1975
DocketNo. 29,061
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 23 C.M.A. 487 (United States v. Ricketts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Military Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Ricketts, 23 C.M.A. 487, 1 M.J. 78, 50 C.M.R. 567, 23 USCMA 487, 1975 CMA LEXIS 739 (cma 1975).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Ferguson, Senior Judge:

Tried before a general court-martial with members for attempted premeditated murder, the appellant was found guilty of an assault in which grievous bodily harm was intentionally inflicted and was sentenced to confinement at hard labor for 2 years, total forfeitures, and a bad-conduct discharge. Those findings and the sentence were approved by the convening authority and affirmed by the United States Army Court of Military Review.

The facts giving rise to this appeal are as follows. At an out-of-court hearing to discuss proposed instructions, the defense counsel originally indicated that simple assault and assault in which grievous bodily harm was intentionally inflicted were the only lesser included offenses. However, the military judge expressed some reservation as to whether the intentional infliction of grievous bodily harm was a lesser included offense, apparently because he thought that the accused’s intent to inflict such injuries was not alleged in the attempted murder specification. After the defense objected to an instruction on this offense, it was finally agreed that simple assault and battery and assault with a means likely to produce grievous bodily harm were the only lesser included offenses.

As given, the military judge’s instructions encompassed only the charged offense and these two lesser included offenses. At the conclusion of those instructions, the military judge stated:

If the court desires my views as to the form of your findings after they have been reached, the court will be open[ed] and the President . . . before announcing the findings . . . will present them to me to examine for defects in form.

After deliberations and upon reconvening the court, the military judge asked the members if they had reached their findings. The president responded, "Your honor, we request that you examine the verbiage of the findings.” The court’s initial worksheet, which the president then handed to the military judge, contained the following notation:

Of the Specification . . . Guilty, except the word(s) "with premeditation, attempt to murder” (and "a 105 mm shell casing”), [substituting therefor . . . the word(s) "unlawfully commit aggravated assault, producing . . . grievous bodily harm, upon” for the former only”)] of the excepted word(s), Not Guilty (, of the substituted word(s), Guilty).
Of the Charge . . . Not Guilty, but Guilty of a violation of Article 128.

Upon examination of those findings, the military judge expressed the view that the worksheet suggested possible findings of guilty to either of two offenses: an assault with a means likely to produce grievous bodily harm or an assault in which grievous bodily harm was intentionally inflicted. Because his original instructions did not encompass the [489]*489latter, the military judge, over defense objection, indicated that he would further instruct on both of these offenses in order to remove the ambiguity. He also stated that the offense of attempted murder would not be reconsidered by the court since their originally proposed findings reflected a not guilty verdict as to it. When the court members still expressed some confusion as to the proper wording involved in the two lesser included offenses following the additionally given instructions, the military judge explained the proper wording for findings by exceptions and substitutions and gave the court a findings worksheet containing the appropriate language as to each. The court then retired and subsequently returned findings of guilty to an assault in which grievous bodily harm was intentionally inflicted.

As so presented, we granted review to consider whether the military judge could properly give additional instructions under the circumstances of this case; whether, in doing so, he also should have instructed the court on the procedures for reconsideration; whether he erred by refusing a defense request to include the proper wording for simple assault and battery in the final worksheet submitted to the court; and whether he erred by failing to instruct that the court could still return findings of not guilty. Our disposition of this case requires only a discussion of the first issue.

Paragraph 74/(1), Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, 1969 (Rev.), establishes a careful procedure by which the court members, after finally voting on findings in closed session, may ask the military judge for assistance in putting those findings in proper form. Although this paragraph specifically provides that any statement by the president of the court which is made during such a request does not constitute the formal announcement of findings,1 the provisions of this paragraph make it abundantly clear that this procedure is only designed to provide the court members with a means of assistance whereby the military judge may aid them in open court with the proper wording or form of the findings that have already been voted upon and reached in closed session.2

As evidenced from the original findings worksheet which the president of the court here submitted to the military judge in accordance with the procedure as outlined above, the court members had voted upon and made their findings. The only matter remaining unresolved was the proper wording or form of those findings for the court had clearly reached its verdict. The crucial question thus presented for our consideration is whether the military judge could properly give additional instructions, including one on a lesser offense erroneously omitted from his original charge,3 at this point in the proceedings.

The question of whether a law officer, the Code’s predecessor to the military judge, could ever properly direct the court members to reconsider their findings in order that any error or omission in his original charge might be corrected was last considered by this Court in United States v Cooper, 15 USCMA 322, 35 CMR 294 (1965). We found prejudicial error in that case where the law officer, well after the announcement of findings and during the sentencing portion of the [490]*490trial, attempted to have the court revoke its earlier findings in order to correct his failure originally to give an instruction on the effect of character evidence and to have the court vote again on the issue of guilt or innocence. After reviewing the pertinent Code and Manual provisions then existing as well as applicable federal and state authority on the matter, we concluded:4

In light of these well-defined principles, we believe the correct rule to be applied in military law is that, as noted in the authorities set out above, it is the right and duty of the law officer to recall the court and correct any error or omission in his charge at any time prior to its return of a proper verdict. . . . Application of this rule gives the widest possible latitude to the trial judge to correct error at the nisi prius level and to avoid prejudice to the accused though permitting the court to deliberate without proper guidance. At the same time, the accused remains protected from the dangers inherent in attempting to have the members, as here, reconsider with open minds and under proper instructions an issue which they have already settled to their own satisfaction, albeit without correct advice concerning the applicable law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 C.M.A. 487, 1 M.J. 78, 50 C.M.R. 567, 23 USCMA 487, 1975 CMA LEXIS 739, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-ricketts-cma-1975.